Tijuana police force ordered to turn in gunsBy Sandra DibbleSan Diego Union Tribune Jan. 07, 2007 |
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![]() TIJUANA – The city's entire 2,300-member municipal police force has been ordered to turn in its weapons, leaving doubt Thursday about who would be patrolling this city of more than 1.5 million residents. The surprise directive from Mexico's Defense Secretariat comes a day after President Felipe Calderon ordered Operation Tijuana, a major offensive against organized crime in the city. More than 3,000 soldiers and federal agents are being sent to the city with the aim of tackling the city's crime problems. Federal officials were expected to conduct ballistics tests on the weapons, apparently to see if they could link any of the weapons to the many killings that have been attributed to drug cartels. Dozens of police officers carrying a range of handguns and automatic weapons lined up Thursday at department headquarters on Eighth Street. The Mexican military, which maintains a registry of weapons, routinely checks police weapons, and officers initially thought this was a regular check. Federal officials have repeatedly said corruption is widespread in Tijuana's department, which is charged with responsible for maintaining public order in the city. Mayor Jorge Hank Rhon, in a television interview, said that he has ordered the police department to refrain from patrols. “I can't send them to war without a weapon,” the mayor said. In the absence of the city officers, the mayor said federal forces will be doing the job of the municipal department. |